Gunwalker Scandal Escalates: Grenadewalker?

As we're finding out that the Operation Fast and Furious scandal reached higher than previously thought, we're also finding out it was perhaps wider-ranging and more dangerous.

The Wall Street Journal reports:

Federal authorities are probing why the U.S. in 2010 let go an Arizona man accused of supplying grenades to a Mexican drug cartel, a case that played a role in the ouster last week of the nation's top firearms regulator and the U.S. attorney in Phoenix.

According to Business Insider, the same U.S. attorney, Dennis Burke, who recently "resigned" was responsible for letting go Jean Baptiste Kingery, who had confessed to providing weapons to the La Familia Michoacana drug cartel (now defunct):

Kingery, who was arrested and released in June 2010, confessed to manufacturing improvised explosive devices (IEDs) using grenade components from the U.S. He also admitted to helping the cartel convert semi-automatic rifles into machine guns. Mexican criminal organizations are increasingly using these military-style weapons as the cartels escalate their wars against the government and one another.

Despite Kingery's confession, and over loud protestations from the arresting ATF officers, the U.S. Attorney's office let Kingery go within hours of his arrest.

Meanwhile, Attorney General Eric Holder is claiming no one in the upper ranks of the Justice Department was aware of the program Issa has called "felony stupid." According to ABC News, Holder is making the case that this was merely a "flawed enforcement operation”:

Citing an independent review by the Justice Department inspector general, Holder said, “We’ll certainly see, I think, at the end of that exactly who was involved, exactly who made the decisions in what was clearly, I think, a flawed enforcement effort. But the notion that somehow or other that this thing reaches into the upper levels of the Justice Department is something that at this point I don’t think is supported by the facts. And I think as we examine and as all the facts are in fact revealed, we’ll see that that is not the case.”

This assertion is refuted by emails which show Assistant Attorney General (Criminal Division) Lanny Breuer and Gary Grindler, Eric Holder’s chief of staff -- among others -- were aware of the program. It doesn't get much higher up than the AAG tasked with criminal prosecutions and the AG's chief of staff.